London- New York: Minor Compositions, 2011. - 134 p.
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ISBN: 978-1-57027-228-8
Despite recent crises in the financial system, uprisings in Greece, France, Tunisia, and Bolivia, worldwide decline of faith in neoliberal trade policies, deepening ecological catastrophes, and global deficits of realized democracy, we still live in an era of spectacular capitalism. But what is spectacular capitalism? Spectacular capitalism is the dominant mythology of capitalism that disguises its internal logic and denies the macroeconomic reality of the actually existing capitalist world. Taking on this elusive mythology, and those who too easily accept it, Richard Gilman-Opalsky exposes the manipulative and self-serving narrative of spectacular capitalism.
Drawing on the work of Guy Debord, Gilman-Opalsky argues that the theory of practice and practice of theory are superseded by upheavals that do the work of philosophy. One could ask: Who better raises questions about public and private spheres of influence and control, Jürgen Habermas or the water war activists who made a rebellion in Cochabamba, Bolivia in the spring of 2000? Or, has any sociological theorist done better than the Zapatistas to reframe and raise questions about indigenous identity? Spectacular Capitalism makes the case not only for a new philosophy of praxis, but for praxis itself as the delivery mechanism for philosophy – for the field of human action, of contestation and conflict, to raise directly the most irresistible questions about the truth and morality of the existing state of affairs.
Richard Gilman-Opalsky is Assistant Professor of Political Philosophy in the Department of Political Science at the University of Illinois at Springfield. He is the author of Unbounded Publics: Transgressive Public Spheres, Zapatismo, and Political Theory (Lexington Books, 2008), as well as numerous articles.
Acknowledgements and Dedication
Introduction: A Priori
Selectively Forgetting Baudrillard
A Critique in Broad Strokes
On Simulacra: Truth and Reality
A Farewell to History
Rescuing Praxis from the Wreckage
Reconsidering Situationist Praxis
Spectacle and Depoliticization
Revolutionary Alternatives to Revolution
Reconsidering Situationist Praxis
Socialism and Radical Philosophy
Socialist Spectacle and Philosophy
Capitalist Spectacle, Situationist Perpsective
Which Way Forward? A General Direction
Theses on Debord